There are two overarching types of variables in Java:

  1. Primitives: variables that contain data. If you want to manipulate the data in a primitive variable you can manipulate that variable directly. By convention primitive types start with a lowercase letter. For example variables of type int or char are primitives.

  2. References: variables that contain the memory address of an Object i.e. variables that refer to an Object. If you want to manipulate the Object that a reference variable refers to you must dereference it. Dereferencing usually entails using . to access a method or field, or using [ to index an array. By convention reference types are usually denoted with a type that starts in uppercase. For example variables of type Object are references.

Consider the following code where you declare a variable of primitive type int and don't initialize it:

int x;
int y = x + x;

These two lines will crash the program because no value is specified for x and we are trying to use x's value to specify y. All primitives have to be initialized to a usable value before they are manipulated.

Now here is where things get interesting. Reference variables can be set to null which means "I am referencing nothing". You can get a null value in a reference variable if you explicitly set it that way, or a reference variable is uninitialized and the compiler does not catch it (Java will automatically set the variable to null).

If a reference variable is set to null either explicitly by you or through Java automatically, and you attempt to dereference it you get a NullPointerException.

The NullPointerException (NPE) typically occurs when you declare a variable but did not create an object and assign it to the variable before trying to use the contents of the variable. So you have a reference to something that does not actually exist.

Take the following code:

Integer num;
num = new Integer(10);

The first line declares a variable named num, but it does not actually contain a reference value yet. Since you have not yet said what to point to, Java sets it to null.

In the second line, the new keyword is used to instantiate (or create) an object of type Integer, and the reference variable num is assigned to that Integer object.

If you attempt to dereference num before creating the object you get a NullPointerException. In the most trivial cases, the compiler will catch the problem and let you know that "num may not have been initialized," but sometimes you may write code that does not directly create the object.

For instance, you may have a method as follows:

public void doSomething(SomeObject obj) {
   // Do something to obj, assumes obj is not null
   obj.myMethod();
}

In which case, you are not creating the object obj, but rather assuming that it was created before the doSomething() method was called. Note, it is possible to call the method like this:

doSomething(null);

In which case, obj is null, and the statement obj.myMethod() will throw a NullPointerException.

If the method is intended to do something to the passed-in object as the above method does, it is appropriate to throw the NullPointerException because it's a programmer error and the programmer will need that information for debugging purposes.

In addition to NullPointerExceptions thrown as a result of the method's logic, you can also check the method arguments for null values and throw NPEs explicitly by adding something like the following near the beginning of a method:

// Throws an NPE with a custom error message if obj is null
Objects.requireNonNull(obj, "obj must not be null");

Note that it's helpful to say in your error message clearly which object cannot be null. The advantage of validating this is that 1) you can return your own clearer error messages and 2) for the rest of the method you know that unless obj is reassigned, it is not null and can be dereferenced safely.

Alternatively, there may be cases where the purpose of the method is not solely to operate on the passed in object, and therefore a null parameter may be acceptable. In this case, you would need to check for a null parameter and behave differently. You should also explain this in the documentation. For example, doSomething() could be written as:

/**
  * @param obj An optional foo for ____. May be null, in which case
  *  the result will be ____.
  */
public void doSomething(SomeObject obj) {
    if(obj == null) {
       // Do something
    } else {
       // Do something else
    }
}

Finally, How to pinpoint the exception & cause using Stack Trace

What methods/tools can be used to determine the cause so that you stop the exception from causing the program to terminate prematurely?

Sonar with find bugs can detect NPE. Can sonar catch null pointer exceptions caused by JVM Dynamically

Now Java 14 has added a new language feature to show the root cause of NullPointerException. This language feature has been part of SAP commercial JVM since 2006.

In Java 14, the following is a sample NullPointerException Exception message:

in thread "main" java.lang.NullPointerException: Cannot invoke "java.util.List.size()" because "list" is null

List of situations that cause a NullPointerException to occur

Here are all the situations in which a NullPointerException occurs, that are directly* mentioned by the Java Language Specification:

  • Accessing (i.e. getting or setting) an instance field of a null reference. (static fields don't count!)
  • Calling an instance method of a null reference. (static methods don't count!)
  • throw null;
  • Accessing elements of a null array.
  • Synchronising on null - synchronized (someNullReference) { ... }
  • Any integer/floating point operator can throw a NullPointerException if one of its operands is a boxed null reference
  • An unboxing conversion throws a NullPointerException if the boxed value is null.
  • Calling super on a null reference throws a NullPointerException. If you are confused, this is talking about qualified superclass constructor invocations:
class Outer {
    class Inner {}
}
class ChildOfInner extends Outer.Inner {
    ChildOfInner(Outer o) { 
        o.super(); // if o is null, NPE gets thrown
    }
}
  • Using a for (element : iterable) loop to loop through a null collection/array.

  • switch (foo) { ... } (whether its an expression or statement) can throw a NullPointerException when foo is null.

  • foo.new SomeInnerClass() throws a NullPointerException when foo is null.

  • Method references of the form name1::name2 or primaryExpression::name throws a NullPointerException when evaluated when name1 or primaryExpression evaluates to null.

    a note from the JLS here says that, someInstance.someStaticMethod() doesn't throw an NPE, because someStaticMethod is static, but someInstance::someStaticMethod still throw an NPE!

* Note that the JLS probably also says a lot about NPEs indirectly.

🌐
Oracle
docs.oracle.com › javase › 8 › docs › api › java › lang › NullPointerException.html
NullPointerException (Java Platform SE 8 )
October 20, 2025 - Java™ Platform Standard Ed. 8 ... Thrown when an application attempts to use null in a case where an object is required.
🌐
GeeksforGeeks
geeksforgeeks.org › java › null-pointer-exception-in-java
Null Pointer Exception in Java - GeeksforGeeks
August 5, 2025 - A NullPointerException in Java is a RuntimeException. It occurs when a program attempts to use an object reference that has the null value.
Discussions

[Java] Can someone nullpointerexception to me in layman's terms?
What I understand so far is that basically, null is a variable that exists but does not hold a value. Hmm, not exactly. null as a concept represents the absence of a value. null is materially different than 0, or an empty string (""); those are values. null means "no value". Now, to really understand what a NullPointerException is, you have to understand what a reference is. When you say this: String myString = "Hello World"; You are creating a block of memory somewhere in your system's memory, and storing the data "Hello World" inside it. Then, it's taking the memory address of that block of memory and storing it inside a variable called myString. When you use myString, Java is dereferencing that memory address and using the value stored there. When you pass the variable to a function, you aren't copying the string, just the address of the string. This address is considered a "pointer" to the real value. But, what if you wanted to have a string variable but you don't want it set to anything? Or just haven't set it to anything? String myString; What value does this hold? Well...it doesn't. It is null. What null actually maps to is a memory address of 0. i.e. not a real address; it lets the system know that "this is not a value". When you create a string array, each cell of the array is a block that can hold one of those addresses. But by default each cell is unset; therefore null. When you call this code: words[0].toUpperCase() You say "get me the string in the very first cell of the words array. Then dereference it, and call toUpperCase() on it." But since it doesn't actually point to a real block of memory, it can't call toUpperCase() on it because "it" doesn't exist. So it crashes. Hope that helps. More on reddit.com
🌐 r/learnprogramming
11
1
March 5, 2020
Eliminating Null Pointer Exceptions
IMO, the existence of null pointers in a memory safe language is contrary to its purpose. Null pointers are memory safety. They prevent you from doing the memory unsafe thing of referencing unintialized memory. More on reddit.com
🌐 r/java
94
0
June 24, 2024
Nullpointerexception message - Language Design - Kotlin Discussions
I guess Kotlin is helpless here. It simply throws java.lang.NullPointerException. we should get valuable message of the exception. !! is a nice hack to bypass the checks but underneath outcome is same as Java This is a place where kotlin depends on JDK version as right now I use 11 this would ... More on discuss.kotlinlang.org
🌐 discuss.kotlinlang.org
0
December 9, 2021
How to fix java.lang.NullPointerException?
Ezekiel dela Peña is having issues with: I'm currently using Eclipse LUNA (JAVA EE IDE) and I'm currently doing the prompting guess activity on a Java Basic Course. ERROR MESSAG... More on teamtreehouse.com
🌐 teamtreehouse.com
2
March 26, 2015
Top answer
1 of 12
4224

There are two overarching types of variables in Java:

  1. Primitives: variables that contain data. If you want to manipulate the data in a primitive variable you can manipulate that variable directly. By convention primitive types start with a lowercase letter. For example variables of type int or char are primitives.

  2. References: variables that contain the memory address of an Object i.e. variables that refer to an Object. If you want to manipulate the Object that a reference variable refers to you must dereference it. Dereferencing usually entails using . to access a method or field, or using [ to index an array. By convention reference types are usually denoted with a type that starts in uppercase. For example variables of type Object are references.

Consider the following code where you declare a variable of primitive type int and don't initialize it:

int x;
int y = x + x;

These two lines will crash the program because no value is specified for x and we are trying to use x's value to specify y. All primitives have to be initialized to a usable value before they are manipulated.

Now here is where things get interesting. Reference variables can be set to null which means "I am referencing nothing". You can get a null value in a reference variable if you explicitly set it that way, or a reference variable is uninitialized and the compiler does not catch it (Java will automatically set the variable to null).

If a reference variable is set to null either explicitly by you or through Java automatically, and you attempt to dereference it you get a NullPointerException.

The NullPointerException (NPE) typically occurs when you declare a variable but did not create an object and assign it to the variable before trying to use the contents of the variable. So you have a reference to something that does not actually exist.

Take the following code:

Integer num;
num = new Integer(10);

The first line declares a variable named num, but it does not actually contain a reference value yet. Since you have not yet said what to point to, Java sets it to null.

In the second line, the new keyword is used to instantiate (or create) an object of type Integer, and the reference variable num is assigned to that Integer object.

If you attempt to dereference num before creating the object you get a NullPointerException. In the most trivial cases, the compiler will catch the problem and let you know that "num may not have been initialized," but sometimes you may write code that does not directly create the object.

For instance, you may have a method as follows:

public void doSomething(SomeObject obj) {
   // Do something to obj, assumes obj is not null
   obj.myMethod();
}

In which case, you are not creating the object obj, but rather assuming that it was created before the doSomething() method was called. Note, it is possible to call the method like this:

doSomething(null);

In which case, obj is null, and the statement obj.myMethod() will throw a NullPointerException.

If the method is intended to do something to the passed-in object as the above method does, it is appropriate to throw the NullPointerException because it's a programmer error and the programmer will need that information for debugging purposes.

In addition to NullPointerExceptions thrown as a result of the method's logic, you can also check the method arguments for null values and throw NPEs explicitly by adding something like the following near the beginning of a method:

// Throws an NPE with a custom error message if obj is null
Objects.requireNonNull(obj, "obj must not be null");

Note that it's helpful to say in your error message clearly which object cannot be null. The advantage of validating this is that 1) you can return your own clearer error messages and 2) for the rest of the method you know that unless obj is reassigned, it is not null and can be dereferenced safely.

Alternatively, there may be cases where the purpose of the method is not solely to operate on the passed in object, and therefore a null parameter may be acceptable. In this case, you would need to check for a null parameter and behave differently. You should also explain this in the documentation. For example, doSomething() could be written as:

/**
  * @param obj An optional foo for ____. May be null, in which case
  *  the result will be ____.
  */
public void doSomething(SomeObject obj) {
    if(obj == null) {
       // Do something
    } else {
       // Do something else
    }
}

Finally, How to pinpoint the exception & cause using Stack Trace

What methods/tools can be used to determine the cause so that you stop the exception from causing the program to terminate prematurely?

Sonar with find bugs can detect NPE. Can sonar catch null pointer exceptions caused by JVM Dynamically

Now Java 14 has added a new language feature to show the root cause of NullPointerException. This language feature has been part of SAP commercial JVM since 2006.

In Java 14, the following is a sample NullPointerException Exception message:

in thread "main" java.lang.NullPointerException: Cannot invoke "java.util.List.size()" because "list" is null

List of situations that cause a NullPointerException to occur

Here are all the situations in which a NullPointerException occurs, that are directly* mentioned by the Java Language Specification:

  • Accessing (i.e. getting or setting) an instance field of a null reference. (static fields don't count!)
  • Calling an instance method of a null reference. (static methods don't count!)
  • throw null;
  • Accessing elements of a null array.
  • Synchronising on null - synchronized (someNullReference) { ... }
  • Any integer/floating point operator can throw a NullPointerException if one of its operands is a boxed null reference
  • An unboxing conversion throws a NullPointerException if the boxed value is null.
  • Calling super on a null reference throws a NullPointerException. If you are confused, this is talking about qualified superclass constructor invocations:
class Outer {
    class Inner {}
}
class ChildOfInner extends Outer.Inner {
    ChildOfInner(Outer o) { 
        o.super(); // if o is null, NPE gets thrown
    }
}
  • Using a for (element : iterable) loop to loop through a null collection/array.

  • switch (foo) { ... } (whether its an expression or statement) can throw a NullPointerException when foo is null.

  • foo.new SomeInnerClass() throws a NullPointerException when foo is null.

  • Method references of the form name1::name2 or primaryExpression::name throws a NullPointerException when evaluated when name1 or primaryExpression evaluates to null.

    a note from the JLS here says that, someInstance.someStaticMethod() doesn't throw an NPE, because someStaticMethod is static, but someInstance::someStaticMethod still throw an NPE!

* Note that the JLS probably also says a lot about NPEs indirectly.

2 of 12
973

NullPointerExceptions are exceptions that occur when you try to use a reference that points to no location in memory (null) as though it were referencing an object. Calling a method on a null reference or trying to access a field of a null reference will trigger a NullPointerException. These are the most common, but other ways are listed on the NullPointerException javadoc page.

Probably the quickest example code I could come up with to illustrate a NullPointerException would be:

public class Example {

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        Object obj = null;
        obj.hashCode();
    }

}

On the first line inside main, I'm explicitly setting the Object reference obj equal to null. This means I have a reference, but it isn't pointing to any object. After that, I try to treat the reference as though it points to an object by calling a method on it. This results in a NullPointerException because there is no code to execute in the location that the reference is pointing.

(This is a technicality, but I think it bears mentioning: A reference that points to null isn't the same as a C pointer that points to an invalid memory location. A null pointer is literally not pointing anywhere, which is subtly different than pointing to a location that happens to be invalid.)

🌐
Quora
quora.com › Is-it-bad-practice-to-catch-null-pointer-exceptions-in-Java
Is it bad practice to catch null pointer exceptions in Java? - Quora
Answer (1 of 14): Yes, except maybe at the top level. One glaring issue: you can't guarantee that the NPE you caught was due to the specific thing you expected might be null. The program might be causing other NPEs, and those are bugs that should be fixed. If you catch all NPEs and ignore them, ...
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How to do in Java
howtodoinjava.com › home › exception handling › java nullpointerexception
Handling Java NullPointerException and Best Practices
October 1, 2022 - Java NullPointerException is an unchecked exception and extends RuntimeException. Learn why NullPointerException occur and how to handle it in the code.
🌐
Rollbar
rollbar.com › home › how to catch and fix nullpointerexception in java
How to Catch and Fix NullPointerException in Java
1 week ago - Since the value of the string passed from the main() method is null, running the above code causes a NullPointerException: Exception in thread "main" java.lang.NullPointerException at NullPointerExceptionExample.printLength(NullPointerExceptionExample.java:3) at NullPointerExceptionExample.main(NullPointerExceptionExample.java:8)
🌐
Sentry
sentry.io › sentry answers › java › avoiding `nullpointerexception` in java
Avoiding `NullPointerException` in Java | Sentry
July 12, 2022 - The Problem In Java, a NullPointerException occurs when a variable that is being accessed has not yet been assigned to an object, in other words, the variable…
Find elsewhere
🌐
Reddit
reddit.com › r/learnprogramming › [java] can someone nullpointerexception to me in layman's terms?
r/learnprogramming on Reddit: [Java] Can someone nullpointerexception to me in layman's terms?
March 5, 2020 -

Here is a code block from one of my CS professor's slides:

String[] words = new String[5];
		System.out.println("word is: " + words[0]);
		words[0] = words[0].toUpperCase();

When I run it I will inevitably get:

Exception in thread "main" java.lang.NullPointerException at Example.main(Example.java:8)

Why is this? What I understand so far is that basically, null is a variable that exists but does not hold a value. He also includes a visual representation of what is happening and I think I sort of understand what is happening but I was wondering if someone could tell me specifically what I am telling the compiler to do and why it throws an error upon compiling? In other words, what am I telling a computer to do here and why does it respond by telling me it can't do that?

Top answer
1 of 5
3
What I understand so far is that basically, null is a variable that exists but does not hold a value. Hmm, not exactly. null as a concept represents the absence of a value. null is materially different than 0, or an empty string (""); those are values. null means "no value". Now, to really understand what a NullPointerException is, you have to understand what a reference is. When you say this: String myString = "Hello World"; You are creating a block of memory somewhere in your system's memory, and storing the data "Hello World" inside it. Then, it's taking the memory address of that block of memory and storing it inside a variable called myString. When you use myString, Java is dereferencing that memory address and using the value stored there. When you pass the variable to a function, you aren't copying the string, just the address of the string. This address is considered a "pointer" to the real value. But, what if you wanted to have a string variable but you don't want it set to anything? Or just haven't set it to anything? String myString; What value does this hold? Well...it doesn't. It is null. What null actually maps to is a memory address of 0. i.e. not a real address; it lets the system know that "this is not a value". When you create a string array, each cell of the array is a block that can hold one of those addresses. But by default each cell is unset; therefore null. When you call this code: words[0].toUpperCase() You say "get me the string in the very first cell of the words array. Then dereference it, and call toUpperCase() on it." But since it doesn't actually point to a real block of memory, it can't call toUpperCase() on it because "it" doesn't exist. So it crashes. Hope that helps.
2 of 5
2
A null pointer exception is kind of like mailing a package and not putting an address on it. Where is supposed to go? You can’t deliver to (blank) so you get an exception (return to sender). I think your professor gave you a code snippet and not a full working program, so to run it you’d have to put it inside a program of your own. That or it’s intentionally giving an error to demonstrate that error.
🌐
Sentry
sentry.io › sentry answers › java › what is a nullpointerexception, and how do i fix it?
What is a NullPointerException, and how do I fix it? | Sentry
May 15, 2023 - A NullPointerException in Java is one of the most common errors. It means that you are trying to access a part of something that doesn’t exist. For example, in the code below we call .length() on myString, which would usually return the length of the string. In this case, the string doesn’t exist (we set it to null), and so this throws a NullPointerException.
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Quora
quora.com › How-do-you-handle-a-null-pointer-exception-in-Java-using-try-catch
How to handle a null pointer exception in Java using try catch - Quora
Answer (1 of 3): Ideally all your null pointer exceptions happen during development and testing, never in production. So generally your program shouldn’t try to handle [code ]NullPointerException[/code]. Instead, you handle it by correcting the program so that any null pointers that occur during ...
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Tutorialspoint
tutorialspoint.com › java › java_nullpointerexception.htm
Java - Null Pointer Exception
And with multiple nesting level, it becomes more difficult to check which field being null is causing the issue. Java 14 catered to this need. It provided an option to return a more helpful message like below in such case: Exception in thread "main" java.lang.NullPointerException: Cannot invoke "com.tutorialspoint.Department.getName()" because the return value of "com.tutorialspoint.Employee.getDept()" is null at com.tutorialspoint.Tester.main(Tester.java:10)
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/java › eliminating null pointer exceptions
r/java on Reddit: Eliminating Null Pointer Exceptions
June 24, 2024 -

So, this is more of a thought experiment and something I've been wondering for a while. IMO, the existence of null pointers in a memory safe language is contrary to its purpose. What if all uninitialized objects had a default value of empty instead of null? There would be no memory allocation until it was explicitly defined. All interactions with the uninitialized object would behave as if the object were empty and did not fire Null Pointer Exceptions.

Attack!

🌐
Pluralsight
pluralsight.com › blog › software development
How to handle (and avoid) NullPointerExceptions in Java | Online Courses, Learning Paths, and Certifications - Pluralsight
This is helpful with null pointers when the chain contains method invocations that might return null. Consider the sample where everything is on one line. While that may be less typing for the developer at the time, it makes it more challenging if a NullPointerException happens. Even though the exception gives the line where the null pointer is, you don’t know whether university is null, or the return of getCollege or getStudents.
🌐
Oracle
docs.oracle.com › en › java › javase › 11 › docs › api › java.base › java › lang › NullPointerException.html
NullPointerException (Java SE 11 & JDK 11 )
October 20, 2025 - java.lang.Exception · java.lang.RuntimeException · java.lang.NullPointerException · All Implemented Interfaces: Serializable · public class NullPointerException extends RuntimeException · Thrown when an application attempts to use null in a case where an object is required.
🌐
DigitalOcean
digitalocean.com › community › tutorials › java-lang-nullpointerexception
Java NullPointerException - Detect, Fix, and Best Practices | DigitalOcean
August 3, 2022 - Anybody working in java must have ... we don’t need to catch it in the program. NullPointerException is raised in an application when we are trying to do some operation on null where an object is required....
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Kotlin Discussions
discuss.kotlinlang.org › language design
Nullpointerexception message - Language Design - Kotlin Discussions
December 9, 2021 - I guess Kotlin is helpless here. It simply throws java.lang.NullPointerException. we should get valuable message of the exception. !! is a nice hack to bypass the checks but underneath outcome is same as Java This is a place where kotlin depends on JDK version as right now I use 11 this would ...
🌐
Medium
medium.com › @TechiesSpot › java-null-pointer-exception-causes-solutions-best-practices-and-key-points-80f4bd91a302
Java Null Pointer Exception: Causes, Solutions, Best Practices, and Key Points | by Techie's Spot | Medium
January 22, 2024 - Identifying the root causes and implementing preventive measures is crucial for writing robust Java code. A Null Pointer Exception is a runtime exception that occurs when you try to access an object that is not instantiated (i.e., it’s null).